What is it About Romney That is So Objectionable

By Lionel Rolfe

Until I saw him in the debate, I hadn’t really thought much about why Mitt Romney gets on my nerves so badly. He obviously gets on other people’s nerves as well, even including some conservatives, and even other Mormons like Jon Huntsman and Harry Reid.

I’m afraid in that first debate, poor old Barack Obama was having a tough time concealing his disdain for Romney. I’ve heard that Obama is disdainful because Romney is a man without a core, without real beliefs–except for the tenets of his religion, which like most religions has very bizarre beliefs.

From a tactical standpoint, Obama shouldn’t have shown that disdain, but I don’t fault him for doing so. A man who believes in nothing except for what will benefit him immediately can be a turnoff At the bottom of what passes for a soul, this is a man who believes only the rich will get inside those pearly gates, and only folks like him have validity.

At the debate, it became apparent exactly what he is. He’s a salesman, and from my point of view, not even a very smooth one. His words ring hollow despite his bellicosity because he’s a congenital liar. He has no commitment to the truth. I guess he’s regarded as a smooth, fast talking type and judging by his success, you’d think he’s the kind of guy who can sell ice to Eskimos, as the saying goes, although I only saw a scoundrel whose claim to fame is that he made a fortune by practicing a kind of vulture capitalism that left a string of broken lives.

I’m not convinced by the argument he’s generous to charity–most of his charities are his own church’s. And the less said about Mormonism the better. For me, Romney sums up Mormons. They obviously are like Calvinists who believe dollars and power trump ethics and arts and sciences, for that matter. I’m told he’s an elder in the church. I know that some Mormons like John Huntsman and Harry Reid are embarrassed by him. I understand that. I’m afraid as a Jew I could name some of those of my clan who embarrass me, starting with Romney’s friend Bibi Netanyahu. But Judaism includes some amazing human beings, like Einstein, like Mendelssohn. A Romney suggests the whole country would be worshiping only Babbits.

Romney obviously believes that businessmen are the highest kind of human beings. He disdains physicists, violinists, writers, revolutionaries like Tom Paine and community-organizers-turned-president, all the people I value as the most noble of our species. He thinks that billionaires are the supreme triumph of God, I guess. What a bizarre and horrible god he has.

To him, truth is only something that gets in the way of snowing a client or a country. Romney is truly a salesman, who will say whatever he perceives his audience wants.

This is not to say there isn’t something at the core of his being. I think we caught a glimpse of his contempt for all who aren’t billionaires when he talked about the 47 percent. All the posturing and clarifying won’t take away the essence of what he had to say with such unusual passion and conviction when he thought he was in the safety of his kind.

I would have thought he would be more convincing. After all, his customers normally are mostly billionaires. So you’d think that a guy who specializes in billionaires would not lie so badly. But maybe that’s making the assumption billionaires are better than you and me, when the truth of the matter is that most of them are things like scummy casino owners.

Romney’s specialty has been as a vulture capitalists. If he can make money by dismantling capitalism, he’ll do so gladly. He’s sort of a salesman selling out his own country for pennies on the dollar, as long as it rebounds to his bank accounts.

For me, when the stories came out how he bullied a fellow student for being too effeminate at the private school he attended, I immediately knew the guy. I’ve been to a couple of those kinds of schools myself, and they always seemed to have a bully or two like a Romney in attendance.

I knew guys like him growing up. I didn’t like them then and I don’t like them now. For the sake of argument, I’ll grant Romney probably believes that whatever he does is good. In that sense, he’s presumably sincere, although that’s hard for me to see. I somehow can’t imagine him listening to great music, even in the Mormon Tabernacle where great music is sometimes played. He seems to me the ultimate Babbit, the man who believes businessmen are the only true heroes in a society.

Our problems are too large for a man of limited scope like Romney, especially when you contrast him to the incumbent, who is so obviously a much superior human being.

Lionel Rolfe is the author of “Literary L.A.,” “Fat Man on the Left,” “The Uncommon Love of Yaltah Menuhin and Willa Cather,” “The Menuhins: A Family Odyssey,” “Bread and Hyacinths: The Rise and Fall of Utopian Los Angeles” and several other volumes available on Amazon’s Kindlestore.

Beyond the Valley of the Flight Attendants

Enjoy Beyond the Valley of the Flight Attendants, at 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays Feb. 27 through March 28, at The Found Theatre in Long Beach. In an age when “calculated misery” is the new business model for major air carriers, nobody does misery like SuperSaver Airlines. Tickets are $20 for first class and $15 for the penny pincher.

Beyond the Valley of the Flight Attendants

Enjoy Beyond the Valley of the Flight Attendants, at 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays Feb. 27 through March 28, at The Found Theatre in Long Beach. In an age when “calculated misery” is the new business model for major air carriers, nobody does misery like SuperSaver Airlines. Tickets are $20 for first class and $15 for the penny pincher.

Dave Widow and the Line Up

Dave Widow and the Line Up will perform, at 8 p.m. Feb. 28, at the Grand Annex in San Pedro. Dave Widow brings a rock, and rhythm and blues-flavored show featuring songs from his Waiting for The World to End CD. Special guests guitarist Bernie Pearl and bassist Mike Barry will add to the show. Tickets are $20 in advance and $25 at the door.
Details: (310) 833-4813; www.grandvision.org
Venue: Grand Annex
Location: 434 W. 6th St., San Pedro

Stop Kiss

The CSU Dominguez Hills Department of Theatre and Dance will debut its third show of the 2014-2015 season, Stop Kiss, a funny and sensitive love story, at 8 p.m. Feb. 27 in the Edison Theatre. The show will also be performed on Feb. 28, March 6, 7, 13 and 14 at 8 p.m., and on March 1, 8 and 15 at 2 p.m.

35th Annual Quilt Show

The South Bay Quilters Guild presents its 35th Annual Quilt Show: Square Root of Nine, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. March 1, at the Torrance Cultural Arts Center. View more than 200 member quilts and garments on display in the Quilt Gallery. Admission is $8. Children younger than 10 get in free.

Stop Kiss

The CSU Dominguez Hills Department of Theatre and Dance will debut its third show of the 2014-2015 season, Stop Kiss, a funny and sensitive love story, at 8 p.m. Feb. 27 in the Edison Theatre. The show will also be performed on Feb. 28, March 6, 7, 13 and 14 at 8 p.m., and on March 1, 8 and 15 at 2 p.m.

Little Squirts

Experience Little Squirts, from 1:30 to 3 p.m. March 4 through 25, at Cabrillo Marine Aquarium in San Pedro. The class is offered for 2 to 4 year-olds participating with their parents or guardians. The cost for four weekly sessions is $30 ($27 for members) and includes a child’s Little Squirts T-shirt.

Sea Club

Kindergarten through second grade students enrolled in Cabrillo Marine Aquarium’s SEA Club (Science Education Afternoons) will learn while having fun exploring the local marine environment, from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. March 4 through 25. The Aquarium’s marine laboratory classroom will serve as a base station for hands-on ocean exploration. The cost for four weekly sessions is $30 ($27 for members) and includes a SEA Club T-shirt.

Can the Artists of the World be Censored?

Can the Artists of the World be Censored? puts together art work by the artists who were interviewed in a recent article by Andrea Serna for Random Lengths Newspaper, documenting artists reaction to the Charlie Hebdo massacre.

Ties to Modernism

Ties to Modernism reaffirms the continued relevance of modernism in today’s eclectic post-modern world and gives a glimpse into the processes that lead from modernism to post-modernism. The show runs through April 12.

Varnette Honeywood

In honor of Black History Month, the University Library at California State University Dominguez Hills presents an exhibit featuring selected works from acclaimed African-American artist and illustrator Varnette P. Honeywood, through the end of May, in the Library Picture Art Gallery. The exhibit complements two other Black History Month exhibitions at the University Library: The Font of Black Culture in Los Angeles: The Alfred and Bernice Ligon Aquarian Collection and the annual African American Quilters of Los Angeles Quilt Exhibition.

Klaus Center for the Arts Opening

The grand opening and dedication of the Marylyn & Chuck Klaus Center for the Arts will take place on at 6 p.m. March 5 in San Pedro. The festivities include the debut of the student gallery and musical performances by the Marymount Jazz Ensemble.

Can the Artists of the World be Censored?

Can the Artists of the World be Censored? puts together art work by the artists who were interviewed in a recent article by Andrea Serna for Random Lengths Newspaper, documenting artists reaction to the Charlie Hebdo massacre.

Ties to Modernism

Ties to Modernism reaffirms the continued relevance of modernism in today’s eclectic post-modern world and gives a glimpse into the processes that lead from modernism to post-modernism. The show runs through April 12.

Varnette Honeywood

In honor of Black History Month, the University Library at California State University Dominguez Hills presents an exhibit featuring selected works from acclaimed African-American artist and illustrator Varnette P. Honeywood, through the end of May, in the Library Picture Art Gallery. The exhibit complements two other Black History Month exhibitions at the University Library: The Font of Black Culture in Los Angeles: The Alfred and Bernice Ligon Aquarian Collection and the annual African American Quilters of Los Angeles Quilt Exhibition.

Batala Los Angeles

Batala Los Angeles will perform with the Taiko Center of Los Angeles, at 8 p.m. March 6, at the Grand Annex in San Pedro. The Taiko Center of Los Angeles explores rhythms of the world with drumming, dance and special guests.

Beyond the Valley of the Flight Attendants

Enjoy Beyond the Valley of the Flight Attendants, at 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays Feb. 27 through March 28, at The Found Theatre in Long Beach. In an age when “calculated misery” is the new business model for major air carriers, nobody does misery like SuperSaver Airlines. Tickets are $20 for first class and $15 for the penny pincher.

Stop Kiss

The CSU Dominguez Hills Department of Theatre and Dance will debut its third show of the 2014-2015 season, Stop Kiss, a funny and sensitive love story, at 8 p.m. Feb. 27 in the Edison Theatre. The show will also be performed on Feb. 28, March 6, 7, 13 and 14 at 8 p.m., and on March 1, 8 and 15 at 2 p.m.

Taking Sides

The Little Fish Theatre presents Taking Sides, at 8 p.m. March 6 through April 4. The short play is about a U.S. officer investigating individuals and their ties with the Nazi party. On March 29, the play will show at 2 p.m. Individual tickets are $27 and $25 for seniors.

The Real Thing

Tom Stoppard’s The Real Thing is being performed at 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays, and at 2 p.m. Sundays through March 28, at the Long Beach Playhouse. The Real Thing is about an articulate and romantically idealistic playwright who receives a challenge from his wife: take the inept play of a "political prisoner" named Brodie and rework it into a theatrical triumph. In the process, the writer must show his wife that Brodie is more of a thug than a victim of political repression, all the while challenging his own long-held concepts of love, marriage and fidelity. Tickets for adults are $24, seniors $21 and students $14.

Can the Artists of the World be Censored?

Can the Artists of the World be Censored? puts together art work by the artists who were interviewed in a recent article by Andrea Serna for Random Lengths Newspaper, documenting artists reaction to the Charlie Hebdo massacre.

Ties to Modernism

Ties to Modernism reaffirms the continued relevance of modernism in today’s eclectic post-modern world and gives a glimpse into the processes that lead from modernism to post-modernism. The show runs through April 12.

Varnette Honeywood

In honor of Black History Month, the University Library at California State University Dominguez Hills presents an exhibit featuring selected works from acclaimed African-American artist and illustrator Varnette P. Honeywood, through the end of May, in the Library Picture Art Gallery. The exhibit complements two other Black History Month exhibitions at the University Library: The Font of Black Culture in Los Angeles: The Alfred and Bernice Ligon Aquarian Collection and the annual African American Quilters of Los Angeles Quilt Exhibition.

Taking Sides

The Little Fish Theatre presents Taking Sides, at 8 p.m. March 6 through April 4. The short play is about a U.S. officer investigating individuals and their ties with the Nazi party. On March 29, the play will show at 2 p.m. Individual tickets are $27 and $25 for seniors.

The Penis and Vagina Talk Shows

The Long Beach Playhouse presents The Vagina Talk Show and The Penis Talk Show, 6 and 8:15 p.m. on March 7, in Long Beach. Look at human sexuality that as three individuals recline onstage and let their genitalia do the talking as they answer questions from the audience and share personal stories.

Beyond the Valley of the Flight Attendants

Enjoy Beyond the Valley of the Flight Attendants, at 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays Feb. 27 through March 28, at The Found Theatre in Long Beach. In an age when “calculated misery” is the new business model for major air carriers, nobody does misery like SuperSaver Airlines. Tickets are $20 for first class and $15 for the penny pincher.

Cirque Mechanics

The CSU Long Beach presents Cirque Mechanics, at 8 p.m. March 7, at the Richard and Karen Carpenter Performing Arts Center. Encounter a circus unicycles that fly, wheel acrobats that hover, cyclists that whirl, pole climbers that soar and trapeze artists that float.

Stop Kiss

The CSU Dominguez Hills Department of Theatre and Dance will debut its third show of the 2014-2015 season, Stop Kiss, a funny and sensitive love story, at 8 p.m. Feb. 27 in the Edison Theatre. The show will also be performed on Feb. 28, March 6, 7, 13 and 14 at 8 p.m., and on March 1, 8 and 15 at 2 p.m.

The Real Thing

Tom Stoppard’s The Real Thing is being performed at 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays, and at 2 p.m. Sundays through March 28, at the Long Beach Playhouse. The Real Thing is about an articulate and romantically idealistic playwright who receives a challenge from his wife: take the inept play of a "political prisoner" named Brodie and rework it into a theatrical triumph. In the process, the writer must show his wife that Brodie is more of a thug than a victim of political repression, all the while challenging his own long-held concepts of love, marriage and fidelity. Tickets for adults are $24, seniors $21 and students $14.

The Penis and Vagina Talk Shows

The Long Beach Playhouse presents The Vagina Talk Show and The Penis Talk Show, 6 and 8:15 p.m. on March 7, in Long Beach. Look at human sexuality that as three individuals recline onstage and let their genitalia do the talking as they answer questions from the audience and share personal stories.

Can the Artists of the World be Censored?

Can the Artists of the World be Censored? puts together art work by the artists who were interviewed in a recent article by Andrea Serna for Random Lengths Newspaper, documenting artists reaction to the Charlie Hebdo massacre.

Ties to Modernism

Ties to Modernism reaffirms the continued relevance of modernism in today’s eclectic post-modern world and gives a glimpse into the processes that lead from modernism to post-modernism. The show runs through April 12.

Varnette Honeywood

In honor of Black History Month, the University Library at California State University Dominguez Hills presents an exhibit featuring selected works from acclaimed African-American artist and illustrator Varnette P. Honeywood, through the end of May, in the Library Picture Art Gallery. The exhibit complements two other Black History Month exhibitions at the University Library: The Font of Black Culture in Los Angeles: The Alfred and Bernice Ligon Aquarian Collection and the annual African American Quilters of Los Angeles Quilt Exhibition.

Taking Sides

The Little Fish Theatre presents Taking Sides, at 8 p.m. March 6 through April 4. The short play is about a U.S. officer investigating individuals and their ties with the Nazi party. On March 29, the play will show at 2 p.m. Individual tickets are $27 and $25 for seniors.

Stop Kiss

The CSU Dominguez Hills Department of Theatre and Dance will debut its third show of the 2014-2015 season, Stop Kiss, a funny and sensitive love story, at 8 p.m. Feb. 27 in the Edison Theatre. The show will also be performed on Feb. 28, March 6, 7, 13 and 14 at 8 p.m., and on March 1, 8 and 15 at 2 p.m.

The Real Thing

Tom Stoppard’s The Real Thing is being performed at 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays, and at 2 p.m. Sundays through March 28, at the Long Beach Playhouse. The Real Thing is about an articulate and romantically idealistic playwright who receives a challenge from his wife: take the inept play of a "political prisoner" named Brodie and rework it into a theatrical triumph. In the process, the writer must show his wife that Brodie is more of a thug than a victim of political repression, all the while challenging his own long-held concepts of love, marriage and fidelity. Tickets for adults are $24, seniors $21 and students $14.

Can the Artists of the World be Censored?

Can the Artists of the World be Censored? puts together art work by the artists who were interviewed in a recent article by Andrea Serna for Random Lengths Newspaper, documenting artists reaction to the Charlie Hebdo massacre.

Ties to Modernism

Ties to Modernism reaffirms the continued relevance of modernism in today’s eclectic post-modern world and gives a glimpse into the processes that lead from modernism to post-modernism. The show runs through April 12.

Varnette Honeywood

In honor of Black History Month, the University Library at California State University Dominguez Hills presents an exhibit featuring selected works from acclaimed African-American artist and illustrator Varnette P. Honeywood, through the end of May, in the Library Picture Art Gallery. The exhibit complements two other Black History Month exhibitions at the University Library: The Font of Black Culture in Los Angeles: The Alfred and Bernice Ligon Aquarian Collection and the annual African American Quilters of Los Angeles Quilt Exhibition.

Taking Sides

The Little Fish Theatre presents Taking Sides, at 8 p.m. March 6 through April 4. The short play is about a U.S. officer investigating individuals and their ties with the Nazi party. On March 29, the play will show at 2 p.m. Individual tickets are $27 and $25 for seniors.

Can the Artists of the World be Censored?

Can the Artists of the World be Censored? puts together art work by the artists who were interviewed in a recent article by Andrea Serna for Random Lengths Newspaper, documenting artists reaction to the Charlie Hebdo massacre.

Ties to Modernism

Ties to Modernism reaffirms the continued relevance of modernism in today’s eclectic post-modern world and gives a glimpse into the processes that lead from modernism to post-modernism. The show runs through April 12.

Varnette Honeywood

In honor of Black History Month, the University Library at California State University Dominguez Hills presents an exhibit featuring selected works from acclaimed African-American artist and illustrator Varnette P. Honeywood, through the end of May, in the Library Picture Art Gallery. The exhibit complements two other Black History Month exhibitions at the University Library: The Font of Black Culture in Los Angeles: The Alfred and Bernice Ligon Aquarian Collection and the annual African American Quilters of Los Angeles Quilt Exhibition.

Taking Sides

The Little Fish Theatre presents Taking Sides, at 8 p.m. March 6 through April 4. The short play is about a U.S. officer investigating individuals and their ties with the Nazi party. On March 29, the play will show at 2 p.m. Individual tickets are $27 and $25 for seniors.

Can the Artists of the World be Censored?

Can the Artists of the World be Censored? puts together art work by the artists who were interviewed in a recent article by Andrea Serna for Random Lengths Newspaper, documenting artists reaction to the Charlie Hebdo massacre.

Ties to Modernism

Ties to Modernism reaffirms the continued relevance of modernism in today’s eclectic post-modern world and gives a glimpse into the processes that lead from modernism to post-modernism. The show runs through April 12.

Varnette Honeywood

In honor of Black History Month, the University Library at California State University Dominguez Hills presents an exhibit featuring selected works from acclaimed African-American artist and illustrator Varnette P. Honeywood, through the end of May, in the Library Picture Art Gallery. The exhibit complements two other Black History Month exhibitions at the University Library: The Font of Black Culture in Los Angeles: The Alfred and Bernice Ligon Aquarian Collection and the annual African American Quilters of Los Angeles Quilt Exhibition.

Taking Sides

The Little Fish Theatre presents Taking Sides, at 8 p.m. March 6 through April 4. The short play is about a U.S. officer investigating individuals and their ties with the Nazi party. On March 29, the play will show at 2 p.m. Individual tickets are $27 and $25 for seniors.

Bettman and Halpin

CSU Long Beach presents Bettman and Halpin, 7 p.m. on March 11 and March 12, at the Richard and Karen Carpenter Performing Arts Center in Long Beach. The duo will perform a mixture of folk, roots, bluegrass and jazz with transcendent harmonies and roof-raising instrumentals.

Can the Artists of the World be Censored?

Can the Artists of the World be Censored? puts together art work by the artists who were interviewed in a recent article by Andrea Serna for Random Lengths Newspaper, documenting artists reaction to the Charlie Hebdo massacre.

Ties to Modernism

Ties to Modernism reaffirms the continued relevance of modernism in today’s eclectic post-modern world and gives a glimpse into the processes that lead from modernism to post-modernism. The show runs through April 12.

Varnette Honeywood

In honor of Black History Month, the University Library at California State University Dominguez Hills presents an exhibit featuring selected works from acclaimed African-American artist and illustrator Varnette P. Honeywood, through the end of May, in the Library Picture Art Gallery. The exhibit complements two other Black History Month exhibitions at the University Library: The Font of Black Culture in Los Angeles: The Alfred and Bernice Ligon Aquarian Collection and the annual African American Quilters of Los Angeles Quilt Exhibition.

Taking Sides

The Little Fish Theatre presents Taking Sides, at 8 p.m. March 6 through April 4. The short play is about a U.S. officer investigating individuals and their ties with the Nazi party. On March 29, the play will show at 2 p.m. Individual tickets are $27 and $25 for seniors.

Bettman and Halpin

CSU Long Beach presents Bettman and Halpin, 7 p.m. on March 11 and March 12, at the Richard and Karen Carpenter Performing Arts Center in Long Beach. The duo will perform a mixture of folk, roots, bluegrass and jazz with transcendent harmonies and roof-raising instrumentals.

Can the Artists of the World be Censored?

Can the Artists of the World be Censored? puts together art work by the artists who were interviewed in a recent article by Andrea Serna for Random Lengths Newspaper, documenting artists reaction to the Charlie Hebdo massacre.

Ties to Modernism

Ties to Modernism reaffirms the continued relevance of modernism in today’s eclectic post-modern world and gives a glimpse into the processes that lead from modernism to post-modernism. The show runs through April 12.

Varnette Honeywood

In honor of Black History Month, the University Library at California State University Dominguez Hills presents an exhibit featuring selected works from acclaimed African-American artist and illustrator Varnette P. Honeywood, through the end of May, in the Library Picture Art Gallery. The exhibit complements two other Black History Month exhibitions at the University Library: The Font of Black Culture in Los Angeles: The Alfred and Bernice Ligon Aquarian Collection and the annual African American Quilters of Los Angeles Quilt Exhibition.

Taking Sides

The Little Fish Theatre presents Taking Sides, at 8 p.m. March 6 through April 4. The short play is about a U.S. officer investigating individuals and their ties with the Nazi party. On March 29, the play will show at 2 p.m. Individual tickets are $27 and $25 for seniors.

Beyond the Valley of the Flight Attendants

Enjoy Beyond the Valley of the Flight Attendants, at 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays Feb. 27 through March 28, at The Found Theatre in Long Beach. In an age when “calculated misery” is the new business model for major air carriers, nobody does misery like SuperSaver Airlines. Tickets are $20 for first class and $15 for the penny pincher.

Stop Kiss

The CSU Dominguez Hills Department of Theatre and Dance will debut its third show of the 2014-2015 season, Stop Kiss, a funny and sensitive love story, at 8 p.m. Feb. 27 in the Edison Theatre. The show will also be performed on Feb. 28, March 6, 7, 13 and 14 at 8 p.m., and on March 1, 8 and 15 at 2 p.m.

The Real Thing

Tom Stoppard’s The Real Thing is being performed at 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays, and at 2 p.m. Sundays through March 28, at the Long Beach Playhouse. The Real Thing is about an articulate and romantically idealistic playwright who receives a challenge from his wife: take the inept play of a "political prisoner" named Brodie and rework it into a theatrical triumph. In the process, the writer must show his wife that Brodie is more of a thug than a victim of political repression, all the while challenging his own long-held concepts of love, marriage and fidelity. Tickets for adults are $24, seniors $21 and students $14.

Can the Artists of the World be Censored?

Can the Artists of the World be Censored? puts together art work by the artists who were interviewed in a recent article by Andrea Serna for Random Lengths Newspaper, documenting artists reaction to the Charlie Hebdo massacre.

Ties to Modernism

Ties to Modernism reaffirms the continued relevance of modernism in today’s eclectic post-modern world and gives a glimpse into the processes that lead from modernism to post-modernism. The show runs through April 12.

Varnette Honeywood

In honor of Black History Month, the University Library at California State University Dominguez Hills presents an exhibit featuring selected works from acclaimed African-American artist and illustrator Varnette P. Honeywood, through the end of May, in the Library Picture Art Gallery. The exhibit complements two other Black History Month exhibitions at the University Library: The Font of Black Culture in Los Angeles: The Alfred and Bernice Ligon Aquarian Collection and the annual African American Quilters of Los Angeles Quilt Exhibition.

Taking Sides

The Little Fish Theatre presents Taking Sides, at 8 p.m. March 6 through April 4. The short play is about a U.S. officer investigating individuals and their ties with the Nazi party. On March 29, the play will show at 2 p.m. Individual tickets are $27 and $25 for seniors.

Music Under the Guns

As one of the premier community bands in Orange County, Battleship IOWA is proud to be host to the Golden West Pops. This all volunteer community band will serenade guests with performances of patriotic selections, show tunes, popular music, swing, movie melodies and many more! Sit “under the guns” aboard Battleship IOWA while enjoying the warm weather and stunning views of the LA Waterfront. Admission is $10 for adults, $5 for youth/students (w/valid ID) and 5 & under are free.

Beyond the Valley of the Flight Attendants

Enjoy Beyond the Valley of the Flight Attendants, at 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays Feb. 27 through March 28, at The Found Theatre in Long Beach. In an age when “calculated misery” is the new business model for major air carriers, nobody does misery like SuperSaver Airlines. Tickets are $20 for first class and $15 for the penny pincher.

Na Lei Hulu I Ka Wekiu

CSU Long Beach presents Na Lei Hulu I Ka Wekiu, a performance that melds storytelling, music and dance with Hawaiian dance at 8 p.m. on March 14 at the Richard and Karen Carpenter Performing Arts Center in Long Beach. Experience a sensory-rich performance that shares Hawaiian heritage and expressions in Hawaiian dance.

Stop Kiss

The CSU Dominguez Hills Department of Theatre and Dance will debut its third show of the 2014-2015 season, Stop Kiss, a funny and sensitive love story, at 8 p.m. Feb. 27 in the Edison Theatre. The show will also be performed on Feb. 28, March 6, 7, 13 and 14 at 8 p.m., and on March 1, 8 and 15 at 2 p.m.

The Real Thing

Tom Stoppard’s The Real Thing is being performed at 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays, and at 2 p.m. Sundays through March 28, at the Long Beach Playhouse. The Real Thing is about an articulate and romantically idealistic playwright who receives a challenge from his wife: take the inept play of a "political prisoner" named Brodie and rework it into a theatrical triumph. In the process, the writer must show his wife that Brodie is more of a thug than a victim of political repression, all the while challenging his own long-held concepts of love, marriage and fidelity. Tickets for adults are $24, seniors $21 and students $14.

Can the Artists of the World be Censored?

Can the Artists of the World be Censored? puts together art work by the artists who were interviewed in a recent article by Andrea Serna for Random Lengths Newspaper, documenting artists reaction to the Charlie Hebdo massacre.

Ties to Modernism

Ties to Modernism reaffirms the continued relevance of modernism in today’s eclectic post-modern world and gives a glimpse into the processes that lead from modernism to post-modernism. The show runs through April 12.

Varnette Honeywood

In honor of Black History Month, the University Library at California State University Dominguez Hills presents an exhibit featuring selected works from acclaimed African-American artist and illustrator Varnette P. Honeywood, through the end of May, in the Library Picture Art Gallery. The exhibit complements two other Black History Month exhibitions at the University Library: The Font of Black Culture in Los Angeles: The Alfred and Bernice Ligon Aquarian Collection and the annual African American Quilters of Los Angeles Quilt Exhibition.

Taking Sides

The Little Fish Theatre presents Taking Sides, at 8 p.m. March 6 through April 4. The short play is about a U.S. officer investigating individuals and their ties with the Nazi party. On March 29, the play will show at 2 p.m. Individual tickets are $27 and $25 for seniors.

David Sanborn

Experience an evening of smooth jazz with David Sanborn, one of the most acclaimed saxophonist for more than four decades, at 2 p.m. on March 15 at the Richard and Karen Carpenter Performing Arts Center in Long Beach.

Stop Kiss

The CSU Dominguez Hills Department of Theatre and Dance will debut its third show of the 2014-2015 season, Stop Kiss, a funny and sensitive love story, at 8 p.m. Feb. 27 in the Edison Theatre. The show will also be performed on Feb. 28, March 6, 7, 13 and 14 at 8 p.m., and on March 1, 8 and 15 at 2 p.m.

The Real Thing

Tom Stoppard’s The Real Thing is being performed at 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays, and at 2 p.m. Sundays through March 28, at the Long Beach Playhouse. The Real Thing is about an articulate and romantically idealistic playwright who receives a challenge from his wife: take the inept play of a "political prisoner" named Brodie and rework it into a theatrical triumph. In the process, the writer must show his wife that Brodie is more of a thug than a victim of political repression, all the while challenging his own long-held concepts of love, marriage and fidelity. Tickets for adults are $24, seniors $21 and students $14.

A Spoonful of Sherman: A Symphonic Concert

A quintet of dynamic vocalists and a children’s chorus will join the Golden State Pops Orchestra for a family-friendly concert to celebrate the music of Richard and Robert Sherman. The sibling songwriting team has penned some of the most memorable melodies in the Disney songbook. The performance is scheduled to start at 3 p.m. March 15, at the Redondo Beach Performing Arts Center.

Can the Artists of the World be Censored?

Can the Artists of the World be Censored? puts together art work by the artists who were interviewed in a recent article by Andrea Serna for Random Lengths Newspaper, documenting artists reaction to the Charlie Hebdo massacre.

Ties to Modernism

Ties to Modernism reaffirms the continued relevance of modernism in today’s eclectic post-modern world and gives a glimpse into the processes that lead from modernism to post-modernism. The show runs through April 12.

Varnette Honeywood

In honor of Black History Month, the University Library at California State University Dominguez Hills presents an exhibit featuring selected works from acclaimed African-American artist and illustrator Varnette P. Honeywood, through the end of May, in the Library Picture Art Gallery. The exhibit complements two other Black History Month exhibitions at the University Library: The Font of Black Culture in Los Angeles: The Alfred and Bernice Ligon Aquarian Collection and the annual African American Quilters of Los Angeles Quilt Exhibition.

Taking Sides

The Little Fish Theatre presents Taking Sides, at 8 p.m. March 6 through April 4. The short play is about a U.S. officer investigating individuals and their ties with the Nazi party. On March 29, the play will show at 2 p.m. Individual tickets are $27 and $25 for seniors.

Can the Artists of the World be Censored?

Can the Artists of the World be Censored? puts together art work by the artists who were interviewed in a recent article by Andrea Serna for Random Lengths Newspaper, documenting artists reaction to the Charlie Hebdo massacre.

Ties to Modernism

Ties to Modernism reaffirms the continued relevance of modernism in today’s eclectic post-modern world and gives a glimpse into the processes that lead from modernism to post-modernism. The show runs through April 12.

Varnette Honeywood

In honor of Black History Month, the University Library at California State University Dominguez Hills presents an exhibit featuring selected works from acclaimed African-American artist and illustrator Varnette P. Honeywood, through the end of May, in the Library Picture Art Gallery. The exhibit complements two other Black History Month exhibitions at the University Library: The Font of Black Culture in Los Angeles: The Alfred and Bernice Ligon Aquarian Collection and the annual African American Quilters of Los Angeles Quilt Exhibition.

Taking Sides

The Little Fish Theatre presents Taking Sides, at 8 p.m. March 6 through April 4. The short play is about a U.S. officer investigating individuals and their ties with the Nazi party. On March 29, the play will show at 2 p.m. Individual tickets are $27 and $25 for seniors.

Can the Artists of the World be Censored?

Can the Artists of the World be Censored? puts together art work by the artists who were interviewed in a recent article by Andrea Serna for Random Lengths Newspaper, documenting artists reaction to the Charlie Hebdo massacre.

Ties to Modernism

Ties to Modernism reaffirms the continued relevance of modernism in today’s eclectic post-modern world and gives a glimpse into the processes that lead from modernism to post-modernism. The show runs through April 12.

Varnette Honeywood

In honor of Black History Month, the University Library at California State University Dominguez Hills presents an exhibit featuring selected works from acclaimed African-American artist and illustrator Varnette P. Honeywood, through the end of May, in the Library Picture Art Gallery. The exhibit complements two other Black History Month exhibitions at the University Library: The Font of Black Culture in Los Angeles: The Alfred and Bernice Ligon Aquarian Collection and the annual African American Quilters of Los Angeles Quilt Exhibition.

Taking Sides

The Little Fish Theatre presents Taking Sides, at 8 p.m. March 6 through April 4. The short play is about a U.S. officer investigating individuals and their ties with the Nazi party. On March 29, the play will show at 2 p.m. Individual tickets are $27 and $25 for seniors.

Can the Artists of the World be Censored?

Can the Artists of the World be Censored? puts together art work by the artists who were interviewed in a recent article by Andrea Serna for Random Lengths Newspaper, documenting artists reaction to the Charlie Hebdo massacre.

Ties to Modernism

Ties to Modernism reaffirms the continued relevance of modernism in today’s eclectic post-modern world and gives a glimpse into the processes that lead from modernism to post-modernism. The show runs through April 12.

Varnette Honeywood

In honor of Black History Month, the University Library at California State University Dominguez Hills presents an exhibit featuring selected works from acclaimed African-American artist and illustrator Varnette P. Honeywood, through the end of May, in the Library Picture Art Gallery. The exhibit complements two other Black History Month exhibitions at the University Library: The Font of Black Culture in Los Angeles: The Alfred and Bernice Ligon Aquarian Collection and the annual African American Quilters of Los Angeles Quilt Exhibition.

Taking Sides

The Little Fish Theatre presents Taking Sides, at 8 p.m. March 6 through April 4. The short play is about a U.S. officer investigating individuals and their ties with the Nazi party. On March 29, the play will show at 2 p.m. Individual tickets are $27 and $25 for seniors.

Can the Artists of the World be Censored?

Can the Artists of the World be Censored? puts together art work by the artists who were interviewed in a recent article by Andrea Serna for Random Lengths Newspaper, documenting artists reaction to the Charlie Hebdo massacre.

Ties to Modernism

Ties to Modernism reaffirms the continued relevance of modernism in today’s eclectic post-modern world and gives a glimpse into the processes that lead from modernism to post-modernism. The show runs through April 12.

Varnette Honeywood

In honor of Black History Month, the University Library at California State University Dominguez Hills presents an exhibit featuring selected works from acclaimed African-American artist and illustrator Varnette P. Honeywood, through the end of May, in the Library Picture Art Gallery. The exhibit complements two other Black History Month exhibitions at the University Library: The Font of Black Culture in Los Angeles: The Alfred and Bernice Ligon Aquarian Collection and the annual African American Quilters of Los Angeles Quilt Exhibition.

Taking Sides

The Little Fish Theatre presents Taking Sides, at 8 p.m. March 6 through April 4. The short play is about a U.S. officer investigating individuals and their ties with the Nazi party. On March 29, the play will show at 2 p.m. Individual tickets are $27 and $25 for seniors.

John Elgin Woolf: Master of Hollywood Regency

The Palos Verdes Art Center will present the work of American architect John Elgin Woolf in an exhibition running from March 20 through May 29. More than 50 selections from the Woolf archive currently housed at the Art, Architecture & Design Museum at University of California, Santa Barbara will be available to view.

Beyond the Valley of the Flight Attendants

Enjoy Beyond the Valley of the Flight Attendants, at 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays Feb. 27 through March 28, at The Found Theatre in Long Beach. In an age when “calculated misery” is the new business model for major air carriers, nobody does misery like SuperSaver Airlines. Tickets are $20 for first class and $15 for the penny pincher.

The Real Thing

Tom Stoppard’s The Real Thing is being performed at 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays, and at 2 p.m. Sundays through March 28, at the Long Beach Playhouse. The Real Thing is about an articulate and romantically idealistic playwright who receives a challenge from his wife: take the inept play of a "political prisoner" named Brodie and rework it into a theatrical triumph. In the process, the writer must show his wife that Brodie is more of a thug than a victim of political repression, all the while challenging his own long-held concepts of love, marriage and fidelity. Tickets for adults are $24, seniors $21 and students $14.

Can the Artists of the World be Censored?

Can the Artists of the World be Censored? puts together art work by the artists who were interviewed in a recent article by Andrea Serna for Random Lengths Newspaper, documenting artists reaction to the Charlie Hebdo massacre.

Ties to Modernism

Ties to Modernism reaffirms the continued relevance of modernism in today’s eclectic post-modern world and gives a glimpse into the processes that lead from modernism to post-modernism. The show runs through April 12.

Varnette Honeywood

In honor of Black History Month, the University Library at California State University Dominguez Hills presents an exhibit featuring selected works from acclaimed African-American artist and illustrator Varnette P. Honeywood, through the end of May, in the Library Picture Art Gallery. The exhibit complements two other Black History Month exhibitions at the University Library: The Font of Black Culture in Los Angeles: The Alfred and Bernice Ligon Aquarian Collection and the annual African American Quilters of Los Angeles Quilt Exhibition.

Taking Sides

The Little Fish Theatre presents Taking Sides, at 8 p.m. March 6 through April 4. The short play is about a U.S. officer investigating individuals and their ties with the Nazi party. On March 29, the play will show at 2 p.m. Individual tickets are $27 and $25 for seniors.

John Elgin Woolf: Master of Hollywood Regency

The Palos Verdes Art Center will present the work of American architect John Elgin Woolf in an exhibition running from March 20 through May 29. More than 50 selections from the Woolf archive currently housed at the Art, Architecture & Design Museum at University of California, Santa Barbara will be available to view.

Beyond the Valley of the Flight Attendants

Enjoy Beyond the Valley of the Flight Attendants, at 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays Feb. 27 through March 28, at The Found Theatre in Long Beach. In an age when “calculated misery” is the new business model for major air carriers, nobody does misery like SuperSaver Airlines. Tickets are $20 for first class and $15 for the penny pincher.

The Real Thing

Tom Stoppard’s The Real Thing is being performed at 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays, and at 2 p.m. Sundays through March 28, at the Long Beach Playhouse. The Real Thing is about an articulate and romantically idealistic playwright who receives a challenge from his wife: take the inept play of a "political prisoner" named Brodie and rework it into a theatrical triumph. In the process, the writer must show his wife that Brodie is more of a thug than a victim of political repression, all the while challenging his own long-held concepts of love, marriage and fidelity. Tickets for adults are $24, seniors $21 and students $14.

Can the Artists of the World be Censored?

Can the Artists of the World be Censored? puts together art work by the artists who were interviewed in a recent article by Andrea Serna for Random Lengths Newspaper, documenting artists reaction to the Charlie Hebdo massacre.

Ties to Modernism

Ties to Modernism reaffirms the continued relevance of modernism in today’s eclectic post-modern world and gives a glimpse into the processes that lead from modernism to post-modernism. The show runs through April 12.

Varnette Honeywood

In honor of Black History Month, the University Library at California State University Dominguez Hills presents an exhibit featuring selected works from acclaimed African-American artist and illustrator Varnette P. Honeywood, through the end of May, in the Library Picture Art Gallery. The exhibit complements two other Black History Month exhibitions at the University Library: The Font of Black Culture in Los Angeles: The Alfred and Bernice Ligon Aquarian Collection and the annual African American Quilters of Los Angeles Quilt Exhibition.

Taking Sides

The Little Fish Theatre presents Taking Sides, at 8 p.m. March 6 through April 4. The short play is about a U.S. officer investigating individuals and their ties with the Nazi party. On March 29, the play will show at 2 p.m. Individual tickets are $27 and $25 for seniors.

John Elgin Woolf: Master of Hollywood Regency

The Palos Verdes Art Center will present the work of American architect John Elgin Woolf in an exhibition running from March 20 through May 29. More than 50 selections from the Woolf archive currently housed at the Art, Architecture & Design Museum at University of California, Santa Barbara will be available to view.

The Real Thing

Tom Stoppard’s The Real Thing is being performed at 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays, and at 2 p.m. Sundays through March 28, at the Long Beach Playhouse. The Real Thing is about an articulate and romantically idealistic playwright who receives a challenge from his wife: take the inept play of a "political prisoner" named Brodie and rework it into a theatrical triumph. In the process, the writer must show his wife that Brodie is more of a thug than a victim of political repression, all the while challenging his own long-held concepts of love, marriage and fidelity. Tickets for adults are $24, seniors $21 and students $14.

Can the Artists of the World be Censored?

Can the Artists of the World be Censored? puts together art work by the artists who were interviewed in a recent article by Andrea Serna for Random Lengths Newspaper, documenting artists reaction to the Charlie Hebdo massacre.

Ties to Modernism

Ties to Modernism reaffirms the continued relevance of modernism in today’s eclectic post-modern world and gives a glimpse into the processes that lead from modernism to post-modernism. The show runs through April 12.

Varnette Honeywood

In honor of Black History Month, the University Library at California State University Dominguez Hills presents an exhibit featuring selected works from acclaimed African-American artist and illustrator Varnette P. Honeywood, through the end of May, in the Library Picture Art Gallery. The exhibit complements two other Black History Month exhibitions at the University Library: The Font of Black Culture in Los Angeles: The Alfred and Bernice Ligon Aquarian Collection and the annual African American Quilters of Los Angeles Quilt Exhibition.

Taking Sides

The Little Fish Theatre presents Taking Sides, at 8 p.m. March 6 through April 4. The short play is about a U.S. officer investigating individuals and their ties with the Nazi party. On March 29, the play will show at 2 p.m. Individual tickets are $27 and $25 for seniors.

John Elgin Woolf: Master of Hollywood Regency

The Palos Verdes Art Center will present the work of American architect John Elgin Woolf in an exhibition running from March 20 through May 29. More than 50 selections from the Woolf archive currently housed at the Art, Architecture & Design Museum at University of California, Santa Barbara will be available to view.

Can the Artists of the World be Censored?

Can the Artists of the World be Censored? puts together art work by the artists who were interviewed in a recent article by Andrea Serna for Random Lengths Newspaper, documenting artists reaction to the Charlie Hebdo massacre.

Ties to Modernism

Ties to Modernism reaffirms the continued relevance of modernism in today’s eclectic post-modern world and gives a glimpse into the processes that lead from modernism to post-modernism. The show runs through April 12.

Varnette Honeywood

In honor of Black History Month, the University Library at California State University Dominguez Hills presents an exhibit featuring selected works from acclaimed African-American artist and illustrator Varnette P. Honeywood, through the end of May, in the Library Picture Art Gallery. The exhibit complements two other Black History Month exhibitions at the University Library: The Font of Black Culture in Los Angeles: The Alfred and Bernice Ligon Aquarian Collection and the annual African American Quilters of Los Angeles Quilt Exhibition.

Taking Sides

The Little Fish Theatre presents Taking Sides, at 8 p.m. March 6 through April 4. The short play is about a U.S. officer investigating individuals and their ties with the Nazi party. On March 29, the play will show at 2 p.m. Individual tickets are $27 and $25 for seniors.

John Elgin Woolf: Master of Hollywood Regency

The Palos Verdes Art Center will present the work of American architect John Elgin Woolf in an exhibition running from March 20 through May 29. More than 50 selections from the Woolf archive currently housed at the Art, Architecture & Design Museum at University of California, Santa Barbara will be available to view.

Can the Artists of the World be Censored?

Can the Artists of the World be Censored? puts together art work by the artists who were interviewed in a recent article by Andrea Serna for Random Lengths Newspaper, documenting artists reaction to the Charlie Hebdo massacre.

Ties to Modernism

Ties to Modernism reaffirms the continued relevance of modernism in today’s eclectic post-modern world and gives a glimpse into the processes that lead from modernism to post-modernism. The show runs through April 12.

Varnette Honeywood

In honor of Black History Month, the University Library at California State University Dominguez Hills presents an exhibit featuring selected works from acclaimed African-American artist and illustrator Varnette P. Honeywood, through the end of May, in the Library Picture Art Gallery. The exhibit complements two other Black History Month exhibitions at the University Library: The Font of Black Culture in Los Angeles: The Alfred and Bernice Ligon Aquarian Collection and the annual African American Quilters of Los Angeles Quilt Exhibition.

Taking Sides

The Little Fish Theatre presents Taking Sides, at 8 p.m. March 6 through April 4. The short play is about a U.S. officer investigating individuals and their ties with the Nazi party. On March 29, the play will show at 2 p.m. Individual tickets are $27 and $25 for seniors.

John Elgin Woolf: Master of Hollywood Regency

The Palos Verdes Art Center will present the work of American architect John Elgin Woolf in an exhibition running from March 20 through May 29. More than 50 selections from the Woolf archive currently housed at the Art, Architecture & Design Museum at University of California, Santa Barbara will be available to view.

Can the Artists of the World be Censored?

Can the Artists of the World be Censored? puts together art work by the artists who were interviewed in a recent article by Andrea Serna for Random Lengths Newspaper, documenting artists reaction to the Charlie Hebdo massacre.

Ties to Modernism

Ties to Modernism reaffirms the continued relevance of modernism in today’s eclectic post-modern world and gives a glimpse into the processes that lead from modernism to post-modernism. The show runs through April 12.

Varnette Honeywood

In honor of Black History Month, the University Library at California State University Dominguez Hills presents an exhibit featuring selected works from acclaimed African-American artist and illustrator Varnette P. Honeywood, through the end of May, in the Library Picture Art Gallery. The exhibit complements two other Black History Month exhibitions at the University Library: The Font of Black Culture in Los Angeles: The Alfred and Bernice Ligon Aquarian Collection and the annual African American Quilters of Los Angeles Quilt Exhibition.

Taking Sides

The Little Fish Theatre presents Taking Sides, at 8 p.m. March 6 through April 4. The short play is about a U.S. officer investigating individuals and their ties with the Nazi party. On March 29, the play will show at 2 p.m. Individual tickets are $27 and $25 for seniors.

John Elgin Woolf: Master of Hollywood Regency

The Palos Verdes Art Center will present the work of American architect John Elgin Woolf in an exhibition running from March 20 through May 29. More than 50 selections from the Woolf archive currently housed at the Art, Architecture & Design Museum at University of California, Santa Barbara will be available to view.

Can the Artists of the World be Censored?

Can the Artists of the World be Censored? puts together art work by the artists who were interviewed in a recent article by Andrea Serna for Random Lengths Newspaper, documenting artists reaction to the Charlie Hebdo massacre.

Ties to Modernism

Ties to Modernism reaffirms the continued relevance of modernism in today’s eclectic post-modern world and gives a glimpse into the processes that lead from modernism to post-modernism. The show runs through April 12.

Varnette Honeywood

In honor of Black History Month, the University Library at California State University Dominguez Hills presents an exhibit featuring selected works from acclaimed African-American artist and illustrator Varnette P. Honeywood, through the end of May, in the Library Picture Art Gallery. The exhibit complements two other Black History Month exhibitions at the University Library: The Font of Black Culture in Los Angeles: The Alfred and Bernice Ligon Aquarian Collection and the annual African American Quilters of Los Angeles Quilt Exhibition.

Taking Sides

The Little Fish Theatre presents Taking Sides, at 8 p.m. March 6 through April 4. The short play is about a U.S. officer investigating individuals and their ties with the Nazi party. On March 29, the play will show at 2 p.m. Individual tickets are $27 and $25 for seniors.

John Elgin Woolf: Master of Hollywood Regency

The Palos Verdes Art Center will present the work of American architect John Elgin Woolf in an exhibition running from March 20 through May 29. More than 50 selections from the Woolf archive currently housed at the Art, Architecture & Design Museum at University of California, Santa Barbara will be available to view.

Beyond the Valley of the Flight Attendants

Enjoy Beyond the Valley of the Flight Attendants, at 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays Feb. 27 through March 28, at The Found Theatre in Long Beach. In an age when “calculated misery” is the new business model for major air carriers, nobody does misery like SuperSaver Airlines. Tickets are $20 for first class and $15 for the penny pincher.

The Real Thing

Tom Stoppard’s The Real Thing is being performed at 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays, and at 2 p.m. Sundays through March 28, at the Long Beach Playhouse. The Real Thing is about an articulate and romantically idealistic playwright who receives a challenge from his wife: take the inept play of a "political prisoner" named Brodie and rework it into a theatrical triumph. In the process, the writer must show his wife that Brodie is more of a thug than a victim of political repression, all the while challenging his own long-held concepts of love, marriage and fidelity. Tickets for adults are $24, seniors $21 and students $14.

Can the Artists of the World be Censored?

Can the Artists of the World be Censored? puts together art work by the artists who were interviewed in a recent article by Andrea Serna for Random Lengths Newspaper, documenting artists reaction to the Charlie Hebdo massacre.

Ties to Modernism

Ties to Modernism reaffirms the continued relevance of modernism in today’s eclectic post-modern world and gives a glimpse into the processes that lead from modernism to post-modernism. The show runs through April 12.

Varnette Honeywood

In honor of Black History Month, the University Library at California State University Dominguez Hills presents an exhibit featuring selected works from acclaimed African-American artist and illustrator Varnette P. Honeywood, through the end of May, in the Library Picture Art Gallery. The exhibit complements two other Black History Month exhibitions at the University Library: The Font of Black Culture in Los Angeles: The Alfred and Bernice Ligon Aquarian Collection and the annual African American Quilters of Los Angeles Quilt Exhibition.

Taking Sides

The Little Fish Theatre presents Taking Sides, at 8 p.m. March 6 through April 4. The short play is about a U.S. officer investigating individuals and their ties with the Nazi party. On March 29, the play will show at 2 p.m. Individual tickets are $27 and $25 for seniors.

John Elgin Woolf: Master of Hollywood Regency

The Palos Verdes Art Center will present the work of American architect John Elgin Woolf in an exhibition running from March 20 through May 29. More than 50 selections from the Woolf archive currently housed at the Art, Architecture & Design Museum at University of California, Santa Barbara will be available to view.

Beyond the Valley of the Flight Attendants

Enjoy Beyond the Valley of the Flight Attendants, at 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays Feb. 27 through March 28, at The Found Theatre in Long Beach. In an age when “calculated misery” is the new business model for major air carriers, nobody does misery like SuperSaver Airlines. Tickets are $20 for first class and $15 for the penny pincher.

The Real Thing

Tom Stoppard’s The Real Thing is being performed at 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays, and at 2 p.m. Sundays through March 28, at the Long Beach Playhouse. The Real Thing is about an articulate and romantically idealistic playwright who receives a challenge from his wife: take the inept play of a "political prisoner" named Brodie and rework it into a theatrical triumph. In the process, the writer must show his wife that Brodie is more of a thug than a victim of political repression, all the while challenging his own long-held concepts of love, marriage and fidelity. Tickets for adults are $24, seniors $21 and students $14.

Can the Artists of the World be Censored?

Can the Artists of the World be Censored? puts together art work by the artists who were interviewed in a recent article by Andrea Serna for Random Lengths Newspaper, documenting artists reaction to the Charlie Hebdo massacre.

Ties to Modernism

Ties to Modernism reaffirms the continued relevance of modernism in today’s eclectic post-modern world and gives a glimpse into the processes that lead from modernism to post-modernism. The show runs through April 12.

Varnette Honeywood

In honor of Black History Month, the University Library at California State University Dominguez Hills presents an exhibit featuring selected works from acclaimed African-American artist and illustrator Varnette P. Honeywood, through the end of May, in the Library Picture Art Gallery. The exhibit complements two other Black History Month exhibitions at the University Library: The Font of Black Culture in Los Angeles: The Alfred and Bernice Ligon Aquarian Collection and the annual African American Quilters of Los Angeles Quilt Exhibition.

Taking Sides

The Little Fish Theatre presents Taking Sides, at 8 p.m. March 6 through April 4. The short play is about a U.S. officer investigating individuals and their ties with the Nazi party. On March 29, the play will show at 2 p.m. Individual tickets are $27 and $25 for seniors.

John Elgin Woolf: Master of Hollywood Regency

The Palos Verdes Art Center will present the work of American architect John Elgin Woolf in an exhibition running from March 20 through May 29. More than 50 selections from the Woolf archive currently housed at the Art, Architecture & Design Museum at University of California, Santa Barbara will be available to view.

Can the Artists of the World be Censored?

Can the Artists of the World be Censored? puts together art work by the artists who were interviewed in a recent article by Andrea Serna for Random Lengths Newspaper, documenting artists reaction to the Charlie Hebdo massacre.

Ties to Modernism

Ties to Modernism reaffirms the continued relevance of modernism in today’s eclectic post-modern world and gives a glimpse into the processes that lead from modernism to post-modernism. The show runs through April 12.

Varnette Honeywood

In honor of Black History Month, the University Library at California State University Dominguez Hills presents an exhibit featuring selected works from acclaimed African-American artist and illustrator Varnette P. Honeywood, through the end of May, in the Library Picture Art Gallery. The exhibit complements two other Black History Month exhibitions at the University Library: The Font of Black Culture in Los Angeles: The Alfred and Bernice Ligon Aquarian Collection and the annual African American Quilters of Los Angeles Quilt Exhibition.

Taking Sides

The Little Fish Theatre presents Taking Sides, at 8 p.m. March 6 through April 4. The short play is about a U.S. officer investigating individuals and their ties with the Nazi party. On March 29, the play will show at 2 p.m. Individual tickets are $27 and $25 for seniors.

John Elgin Woolf: Master of Hollywood Regency

The Palos Verdes Art Center will present the work of American architect John Elgin Woolf in an exhibition running from March 20 through May 29. More than 50 selections from the Woolf archive currently housed at the Art, Architecture & Design Museum at University of California, Santa Barbara will be available to view.

Can the Artists of the World be Censored?

Can the Artists of the World be Censored? puts together art work by the artists who were interviewed in a recent article by Andrea Serna for Random Lengths Newspaper, documenting artists reaction to the Charlie Hebdo massacre.

Ties to Modernism

Ties to Modernism reaffirms the continued relevance of modernism in today’s eclectic post-modern world and gives a glimpse into the processes that lead from modernism to post-modernism. The show runs through April 12.

Varnette Honeywood

In honor of Black History Month, the University Library at California State University Dominguez Hills presents an exhibit featuring selected works from acclaimed African-American artist and illustrator Varnette P. Honeywood, through the end of May, in the Library Picture Art Gallery. The exhibit complements two other Black History Month exhibitions at the University Library: The Font of Black Culture in Los Angeles: The Alfred and Bernice Ligon Aquarian Collection and the annual African American Quilters of Los Angeles Quilt Exhibition.

Taking Sides

The Little Fish Theatre presents Taking Sides, at 8 p.m. March 6 through April 4. The short play is about a U.S. officer investigating individuals and their ties with the Nazi party. On March 29, the play will show at 2 p.m. Individual tickets are $27 and $25 for seniors.

John Elgin Woolf: Master of Hollywood Regency

The Palos Verdes Art Center will present the work of American architect John Elgin Woolf in an exhibition running from March 20 through May 29. More than 50 selections from the Woolf archive currently housed at the Art, Architecture & Design Museum at University of California, Santa Barbara will be available to view.

Can the Artists of the World be Censored?

Can the Artists of the World be Censored? puts together art work by the artists who were interviewed in a recent article by Andrea Serna for Random Lengths Newspaper, documenting artists reaction to the Charlie Hebdo massacre.

Ties to Modernism

Ties to Modernism reaffirms the continued relevance of modernism in today’s eclectic post-modern world and gives a glimpse into the processes that lead from modernism to post-modernism. The show runs through April 12.

Varnette Honeywood

In honor of Black History Month, the University Library at California State University Dominguez Hills presents an exhibit featuring selected works from acclaimed African-American artist and illustrator Varnette P. Honeywood, through the end of May, in the Library Picture Art Gallery. The exhibit complements two other Black History Month exhibitions at the University Library: The Font of Black Culture in Los Angeles: The Alfred and Bernice Ligon Aquarian Collection and the annual African American Quilters of Los Angeles Quilt Exhibition.

Taking Sides

The Little Fish Theatre presents Taking Sides, at 8 p.m. March 6 through April 4. The short play is about a U.S. officer investigating individuals and their ties with the Nazi party. On March 29, the play will show at 2 p.m. Individual tickets are $27 and $25 for seniors.

John Elgin Woolf: Master of Hollywood Regency

The Palos Verdes Art Center will present the work of American architect John Elgin Woolf in an exhibition running from March 20 through May 29. More than 50 selections from the Woolf archive currently housed at the Art, Architecture & Design Museum at University of California, Santa Barbara will be available to view.

Can the Artists of the World be Censored?

Can the Artists of the World be Censored? puts together art work by the artists who were interviewed in a recent article by Andrea Serna for Random Lengths Newspaper, documenting artists reaction to the Charlie Hebdo massacre.

Ties to Modernism

Ties to Modernism reaffirms the continued relevance of modernism in today’s eclectic post-modern world and gives a glimpse into the processes that lead from modernism to post-modernism. The show runs through April 12.

Varnette Honeywood

In honor of Black History Month, the University Library at California State University Dominguez Hills presents an exhibit featuring selected works from acclaimed African-American artist and illustrator Varnette P. Honeywood, through the end of May, in the Library Picture Art Gallery. The exhibit complements two other Black History Month exhibitions at the University Library: The Font of Black Culture in Los Angeles: The Alfred and Bernice Ligon Aquarian Collection and the annual African American Quilters of Los Angeles Quilt Exhibition.

Taking Sides

The Little Fish Theatre presents Taking Sides, at 8 p.m. March 6 through April 4. The short play is about a U.S. officer investigating individuals and their ties with the Nazi party. On March 29, the play will show at 2 p.m. Individual tickets are $27 and $25 for seniors.

John Elgin Woolf: Master of Hollywood Regency

The Palos Verdes Art Center will present the work of American architect John Elgin Woolf in an exhibition running from March 20 through May 29. More than 50 selections from the Woolf archive currently housed at the Art, Architecture & Design Museum at University of California, Santa Barbara will be available to view.

Can the Artists of the World be Censored?

Can the Artists of the World be Censored? puts together art work by the artists who were interviewed in a recent article by Andrea Serna for Random Lengths Newspaper, documenting artists reaction to the Charlie Hebdo massacre.

Ties to Modernism

Ties to Modernism reaffirms the continued relevance of modernism in today’s eclectic post-modern world and gives a glimpse into the processes that lead from modernism to post-modernism. The show runs through April 12.

Varnette Honeywood

In honor of Black History Month, the University Library at California State University Dominguez Hills presents an exhibit featuring selected works from acclaimed African-American artist and illustrator Varnette P. Honeywood, through the end of May, in the Library Picture Art Gallery. The exhibit complements two other Black History Month exhibitions at the University Library: The Font of Black Culture in Los Angeles: The Alfred and Bernice Ligon Aquarian Collection and the annual African American Quilters of Los Angeles Quilt Exhibition.

Taking Sides

The Little Fish Theatre presents Taking Sides, at 8 p.m. March 6 through April 4. The short play is about a U.S. officer investigating individuals and their ties with the Nazi party. On March 29, the play will show at 2 p.m. Individual tickets are $27 and $25 for seniors.

John Elgin Woolf: Master of Hollywood Regency

The Palos Verdes Art Center will present the work of American architect John Elgin Woolf in an exhibition running from March 20 through May 29. More than 50 selections from the Woolf archive currently housed at the Art, Architecture & Design Museum at University of California, Santa Barbara will be available to view.

Can the Artists of the World be Censored?

Can the Artists of the World be Censored? puts together art work by the artists who were interviewed in a recent article by Andrea Serna for Random Lengths Newspaper, documenting artists reaction to the Charlie Hebdo massacre.

Ties to Modernism

Ties to Modernism reaffirms the continued relevance of modernism in today’s eclectic post-modern world and gives a glimpse into the processes that lead from modernism to post-modernism. The show runs through April 12.

Varnette Honeywood

In honor of Black History Month, the University Library at California State University Dominguez Hills presents an exhibit featuring selected works from acclaimed African-American artist and illustrator Varnette P. Honeywood, through the end of May, in the Library Picture Art Gallery. The exhibit complements two other Black History Month exhibitions at the University Library: The Font of Black Culture in Los Angeles: The Alfred and Bernice Ligon Aquarian Collection and the annual African American Quilters of Los Angeles Quilt Exhibition.

Taking Sides

The Little Fish Theatre presents Taking Sides, at 8 p.m. March 6 through April 4. The short play is about a U.S. officer investigating individuals and their ties with the Nazi party. On March 29, the play will show at 2 p.m. Individual tickets are $27 and $25 for seniors.

John Elgin Woolf: Master of Hollywood Regency

The Palos Verdes Art Center will present the work of American architect John Elgin Woolf in an exhibition running from March 20 through May 29. More than 50 selections from the Woolf archive currently housed at the Art, Architecture & Design Museum at University of California, Santa Barbara will be available to view.